3 results on '"Scifoni, G"'
Search Results
2. Endovascular Treatment for Acute Ischemic Stroke
- Author
-
Ciccone, A, Valvassori, L, Nichelatti, M, Sgoifo, A, Ponzio, M, Sterzi, R, Boccardi, E, SYNTHESIS Expansion Investigators: Gatti, A, Guccione, A, Motto, C, Santilli, I, Tortorella, R, Ferrante, E, Imbesi, F, Marazzi, R, Jann, S, Protti, A, Rizzone, M, Tiraboschi, P, Pero, G, Quilici, L, Piano, M, Zini, A, Casoni, F, Cavazzuti, M, Falzone, F, Nichelli, P, Vallone, S, Carpeggiani, P, Menetti, F, Guidotti, M, Checcarelli, N, Muscia, F, Martegani, A, Torgano, G, Mandelli, C, Zecca, B, Baron, P, Bersano, A, Branca, V, Isalberti, M, Papa, R, Paolucci, A, Magoni, M, Costa, A, Gamba, M, Gasparotti, R, Federico, F, Petruzzellis, M, Tartaglione, B, Mezzapesa, D, Chiumarulo, L, De Blasi, R, Agostoni, E, Botto, E, Longoni, M, Ballarini, V, Reganati, P, Malfatto, L, Rizzi, D, Serrati, C, Balestrino, M, Gandolfo, C, Castellan, L, Mavilio, N, Allegretti, L, Delodovici, Ml, Carimati, F, Verrengia, Ep, Bono, G, Perlasca, F, Craparo, G, Giorgianni, A, Azzini, C, De Vito, A, Tola, M, Saletti, A, Pozzessere, C, Corsi, F, Scifoni, G, Anticoli, S, Pezzella, Fr, Cotroneo, E, Gigli, R, Nencini, P, Palumbo, V, Pantoni, L, Inzitari, D, Mangiafico, S, Chinaglia, M, Russo, M, L'Erario, R, Amistà, P, Malferrari, G, Nucera, A, Zedde, Ml, Dallari, A, Deberti, G, Falaschi, F, Martignoni, A, Zappoli, F, Marcheselli, S, Stival, B, Presbitero, P, Rossi, Ml, Belli, G, Paciaroni, M, Caso, V, Agnelli, Gc, Hamam, M, Bovi, P, Piovan, Enrico, Sessa, M, Scomazzoni, F, Arnaboldi, M, Tancredi, L, Peroni, R, Censori, B, Poloni, M, Lunghi, S, Bonaldi, G, Donati, E, Magni, E, Pavia, M, Cobelli, M, Bottacchi, E, Corso, G, Tosi, P, Cordera, S, Di Giovanni, M, Giardini, G, Meloni, T, Cristoferi, M, Natrella, M, Ruiz, L, Dell'Acqua, Ml, Rolandi, G, Gallesio, I, Sandercock, P, Candelise, L, del Zoppo, G, Ciceri, E, Doneda, P, Daolio, M, Caputo, D, del Zotto, E, Cantisani, T., Ciccone, A, Valvassori, L, Nichelatti, M, Sgoifo, M, Ponzio, M, Sterzi, R, Boccardi, E, and Comi, Giancarlo
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,OCCLUSION ,Psychoanalysis ,RECANALIZATION ,Neuroimaging ,Article ,law.invention ,Brain Ischemia ,TISSUE-PLASMINOGEN-ACTIVATOR ,Randomized controlled trial ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,law ,Case fatality rate ,medicine ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,PROUROKINASE ,cardiovascular diseases ,Adverse effect ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Stroke ,Aged ,Cerebral Hemorrhage ,Thrombectomy ,business.industry ,Standard treatment ,Endovascular Procedures ,TISSUE-PLASMINOGEN-ACTIVATOR, CEREBRAL-ARTERY STROKE, RANDOMIZED-TRIAL, INTRAARTERIAL THROMBOLYSIS, INTRAVENOUS THROMBOLYSIS, OCCLUSION, REVASCULARIZATION, RECANALIZATION, PROUROKINASE, THROMBECTOMY ,Atrial fibrillation ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,INTRAARTERIAL THROMBOLYSIS ,Combined Modality Therapy ,RANDOMIZED-TRIAL ,Cerebral Angiography ,Treatment Outcome ,Anesthesia ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Acute Disease ,REVASCULARIZATION ,Female ,INTRAVENOUS THROMBOLYSIS ,CEREBRAL-ARTERY STROKE ,business ,Fibrinolytic agent - Abstract
In patients with ischemic stroke, endovascular treatment results in a higher rate of recanalization of the affected cerebral artery than systemic intravenous thrombolytic therapy. However, comparison of the clinical efficacy of the two approaches is needed.We randomly assigned 362 patients with acute ischemic stroke, within 4.5 hours after onset, to endovascular therapy (intraarterial thrombolysis with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator [t-PA], mechanical clot disruption or retrieval, or a combination of these approaches) or intravenous t-PA. Treatments were to be given as soon as possible after randomization. The primary outcome was survival free of disability (defined as a modified Rankin score of 0 or 1 on a scale of 0 to 6, with 0 indicating no symptoms, 1 no clinically significant disability despite symptoms, and 6 death) at 3 months.A total of 181 patients were assigned to receive endovascular therapy, and 181 intravenous t-PA. The median time from stroke onset to the start of treatment was 3.75 hours for endovascular therapy and 2.75 hours for intravenous t-PA (P0.001). At 3 months, 55 patients in the endovascular-therapy group (30.4%) and 63 in the intravenous t-PA group (34.8%) were alive without disability (odds ratio adjusted for age, sex, stroke severity, and atrial fibrillation status at baseline, 0.71; 95% confidence interval, 0.44 to 1.14; P=0.16). Fatal or nonfatal symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage within 7 days occurred in 6% of the patients in each group, and there were no significant differences between groups in the rates of other serious adverse events or the case fatality rate.The results of this trial in patients with acute ischemic stroke indicate that endovascular therapy is not superior to standard treatment with intravenous t-PA. (Funded by the Italian Medicines Agency, ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00640367.).
- Published
- 2013
3. Psychopathological Assessment of Risk of Restraint in Acute Psychiatric Patients.
- Author
-
Dazzi F, Tarsitani L, Di Nunzio M, Trincia V, Scifoni G, and Ducci G
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Statistical, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale statistics & numerical data, Intensive Care Units statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders physiopathology, Mental Disorders therapy, Psychiatric Department, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Restraint, Physical statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The study aims to identify independent predictors of physical restraint in acute psychiatric patients and to determine the predictive power of a risk assessment model centered on psychopathological dimensions. We included 1552 patients admitted to a psychiatric intensive care unit over a 5-year period. Patients were rated on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS-E) at admission. Principal axis factoring (PAF) with varimax rotation was performed on BPRS-E items to identify psychopathological factors. Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed. PAF pointed six factors: positive symptoms, negative symptoms, resistance, activation, negative affect, and disorganization. Male sex, younger age, proposal for compulsory admission, severity of symptoms, resistance, activation, and disorganization were identified as independent predictors. Negative symptoms and negative affect were instead protective factors. The BPRS-E factors, when added to other sociodemographic and clinical variables, significantly increased the predictive power of the model. Our findings suggest that a systematic evaluation of the psychopathological dimensions can be usefully included in the early risk assessment of restraint.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.